Australia cracked South Korean spy ring, report says

SUPPRESSED:The news that a spy ring recruited an Australian trade official in 2009 was not initially made public and no South Korean spies had to leave Australia

AFP, SYDNEY

A South Korean spy ring has been uncovered in Australia trying to cultivate public servants to obtain trade secrets, a report said yesterday, but officials insisted relations with Seoul remained robust.

The Sydney Morning Herald said previously suppressed information revealed that South Korea’s National Intelligence Service (NIS) had sought “to obtain sensitive information” on trade negotiations between Canberra and Seoul.

It reported that the Australian Security Intelligence Organisation (ASIO) alleged that a senior Australian agricultural trade specialist was involved in “foreign interference” by the Korean spies and had been “successfully cultivated.”

lost job

The man participated in Australia-South Korea free-trade agreement talks in late 2009, but lost his security clearance and job with the Australian Bureau of Agricultural and Resource Economics and Sciences.

Although engaged in what ASIO described as “inappropriate activities” harmful to Australia’s interests, no South Korean spies had been expelled from Australia.

Instead, in an effort to maintain good relations with the NIS, ASIO took legal action to prevent disclosure of the incident and protect the identities of the South Korean agents.

APPEAL

The details came to light after the trade specialist said his contact with South Korean diplomats was purely social and appealed against his sacking to the Australian Federal Court.

In releasing information about the case, the court identified four NIS officers who served under diplomatic cover in Canberra.

no comment

Australian Minister of Foreign Affairs Bob Carr declined to comment on the case, but said South Korea was one of Australia’s largest export markets and trading partners, and relations were unlikely to be hurt.

“In line with the longstanding practice in Australian governance, I cannot comment on matters of security or intelligence,” he told reporters in Sydney.

“I believe the relationship with the Republic of Korea is so strong, so robust, that this will have no effect on it,” he added, when asked about the report.